Louis Kahn's Fisher House: a Case Study on the Architectural Detail
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University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Theses (Historic Preservation) Graduate Program in Historic Preservation 2009 LOUIS I. KAHN’S FISHER HOUSE: A CASE STUDY ON THE ARCHITECTURAL DETAIL AND DESIGN INTENT Pierson William Booher University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses Part of the Historic Preservation and Conservation Commons Booher, Pierson William, "LOUIS I. KAHN’S FISHER HOUSE: A CASE STUDY ON THE ARCHITECTURAL DETAIL AND DESIGN INTENT" (2009). Theses (Historic Preservation). 132. https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses/132 A THESIS in Historic Preservation Presented to the Faculties of the University of Pennsylvania in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE IN HISTORIC PRESERVATION 2009 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses/132 For more information, please contact [email protected]. LOUIS I. KAHN’S FISHER HOUSE: A CASE STUDY ON THE ARCHITECTURAL DETAIL AND DESIGN INTENT Abstract The preservation of architecturally significant structures has begun to experience a shift in both style and future use. No longer are Jeffersonian and Antebellum homes the focus of young preservationists and the ‘little old ladies’ that preceded them; rather, the tide has shifted towards structures that were both disdained and revered during their time. Modernist structures, while simplistic in form and function, contain a high degree of embedded meaning and significance. While the study focuses on the work of Louis I. Kahn – specifically the Norman Fisher house – an understanding of the design intent and vo erall role of the details within Mid-Century Modernist designs can contribute to future preservation practices involving similar structures. The purpose of this study is to gain an understanding of Kahn’s maturation as a designer and his approach to both embedded truths and the layering of meanings within his designs. In the end, the goal was to further the understanding of the Fisher House, its detail work, and its place within the larger context of Kahn’s career. Kahn’s use of traditional forms – augmented by the precision of modern technology – throughout his late work represents his multifaceted approach to design, attempting to appeal to both the psyche and the materials, themselves, in order to maintain their ‘trueness to Form’. Kahn was not merely recycling traditionalism, but rather retranslating ‘known’ forms – in both assembly and aesthetics – in order to convey a certain aura. Disciplines Historic Preservation and Conservation Comments A THESIS in Historic Preservation Presented to the Faculties of the University of Pennsylvania in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE IN HISTORIC PRESERVATION 2009 This thesis or dissertation is available at ScholarlyCommons: https://repository.upenn.edu/hp_theses/132 LOUIS I. KAHN’S FISHER HOUSE: A CASE STUDY ON THE ARCHITECTURAL DETAIL AND DESIGN INTENT. Pierson William Booher A THESIS in Historic Preservation Presented to the Faculties of the University of Pennsylvania in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE IN HISTORIC PRESERVATION 2009 ____________________________________ Advisor David G. De Long Professor Emeritus of Architecture ____________________________________ Program Chair Frank G. Matero Professor of Architecture ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | I would like to thank my advisor David G. De Long for his incredible support and insight, for without his guidance this work would not be possible. Thank you for being honest and critical, available and efficient despite being 3,000 miles away. You taught me a lot about being a strong writer and I appreciate all of the scholarly insight you have passed on to me. I would also like to thank William Whittaker for allowing me to pester him with a seemingly endless number of questionably relevant insights that I had throughout the past year. Not only were you a great resource, but you were always mindful of the ultimate focus and never afraid to remind me to stay on track. In addition I would like to extend my sincerest gratitude to Nancy Thorne at the Architectural Archives for assisting me with all of my research and always making herself available. Thanks also to Randall Mason for acting as my liaison between the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the Historic Preservation department. You went out of your way to arrange the initial aspects of the study and have been a fantastic resource throughout my time at Penn. Thank you to the entire Fisher family, specifically Doris, Nina, and Claudia, for opening their home to myself and the students of the Kahn Seminar. Mrs. Fisher, without you and your husband’s dreams this study would have had less traction and I am forever grateful for your hospitality and contribution to architecture. And finally I would like to thank everyone else who has gone out of their way to assist me in this endeavor. To the students of the Kahn Seminar – Caitlin Smith, Caitlin Kramer, Taryn D’Ambrogi, Melissa Steeley, Meredith Keller, Angela Spadoni, Vincent Leung, and Kenta Fukunishi – thank you for all of your unique insights and your contribution to the study of such a wonderful building. To Patricia Cummings Loud of the Kimbell Art Museum, and both Garry Van Gerpen and Robert Lizarraga of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, thank you for taking time out of their day to open up your buildings to me, for without your contributions much of this would not have been possible. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS | ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | II LIST OF FIGURES | V CHAPTER ONE | LOUIS I. KAHN 1 SCHOOLING | 2 BEGINNINGS | 7 IN SEARCH OF AN IDENTITY | 13 EARLY HOUSING | 20 CHAPTER TWO | NORMAN, DORIS, AND LOU 29 SCHEME ONE | SUMMER, 1961 32 SCHEME TWO | MARCH, 1962 41 SCHEME THREE | SUMMER (AUG-SEPT), 1963 48 SCHEME FOUR | DECEMBER, 1963 62 SCHEME FIVE | MAY 11, 1964; REVISED: JUNE 4, 1964 67 CHAPTER THREE | THE ARCHITECTURAL WOODWORK DETAIL OF THE NORMAN FISHER HOUSE, HATBORO, PENNSYLVANIA 74 FOUNDATION | 78 IDENTITY | 101 CHAPTER FOUR | THE ESHERICK HOUSE, THE FISHER HOUSE, AND THE KORMAN HOUSE: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE USE OF ARCHITECTURAL WOODWORK DETAIL IN THREE LATE LOUIS KAHN HOUSES 104 THREE HOUSES | 105 IN SEARCH OF A SPIRIT | 116 STRUCTURE.LIGHT.ORNAMENT | 121 iii CHAPTER FIVE | A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE ARCHITECTURAL WOODWORK DETAIL IN THREE PERIOD INSTITUTIONAL PROJECTS 129 THE SALK INSTITUTE FOR BIOLOGICAL STUDIES (1959-65) | 130 THE PHILIPS EXETER ACADEMY LIBRARY (1966-68) | 142 THE YALE CENTER FOR BRITISH ART (1969-74) | 150 ENDINGS | 157 BIBLIOGRAPHY | 163 APPENDIX A | 166 INDEX | 181 iv LIST OF FIGURES | Fig. 1.1: Kahn’s Richards Medical Facility at the University of Pennsylvania...................8 Fig. 1.2: Kahn’s Rendering of the Proposed Palace of Liberal Arts for the 1926 Sesqui- centennial Exposition...........................................................................................................8 Fig. 1.3: Watercolor by Kahn of Amalfi in the Winter of 1928-29....................................11 Fig. 1.4: Pastel Drawing by Kahn of San Marco in Venice, ca. 1951...............................15 Fig. 1.5: View of the Courtyard of Kahn’s Trenton Bathhouse.........................................15 Fig. 1.6: View of the Window Wall of Kahn’s Yale Art Gallery........................................16 Fig. 1.7: Kahn’s Esquisse for a Modern Cathedral Utilizing Tubular Steel as the Primary Structural Element.............................................................................................................16 Fig. 1.8: Image Showing the Inverse Pyramidal Slab of Kahn’s Yale Art Gallery............19 Fig. 1.9: Exterior of Kahn’s Oser House...........................................................................24 Fig. 1.10: Ground Floor Plan for the Unbuilt Francis Adler House..................................26 Fig. 1.11: Ground Floor Plan for the Unbuilt Weber DeVore House.................................26 Fig. 2.1: Scheme One; Ground Floor Plan........................................................................34 Fig. 2.2: Scheme One; Second Floor Plan.........................................................................34 Fig. 2.3: Scheme One; Dining Room & Master Bedroom Sketches.................................37 Fig. 2.4: British Castle Floor Plan Sketches by Kahn.......................................................37 Fig. 2.5: Scheme One; 3 Aug 1961; Northeast Elevation..................................................40 Fig. 2.6: Scheme One; 3 Aug 1961; Ground Floor Plan...................................................40 Fig. 2.7: Scheme Two; 03/09/1962; Ground Floor Plan....................................................43 Fig. 2.8: Scheme Two; 03/09/1962; Southeast Elevation..................................................43 Fig. 2.9: Early Sketch of the Adler House.........................................................................44 Fig. 2.10: Plan of the Trenton Bathhouse..........................................................................44 Fig. 2.11: Scheme Two; 03/09/1962; Northwest Elevation...............................................47 Fig. 2.12: Scheme Two; Third Iteration; Ground Floor Plan............................................47 Fig. 2.13: Plan of the Capitol Complex at Dacca, East Pakistan.......................................50 Fig. 2.14: Sketch of the Erdman Hall Plan........................................................................50